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City Planning - Urban Design |
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Award Categories & 2009 Entries
Submissions for the 2009 Toronto Urban Design Awards were accepted in seven categories. The competition collected a total of 117 entries, including 73 built projects, 24 un-built projects, master plans and visions, and 20 student projects. A summary of each project entered is included with the award categories listed and described below.
1. Elements
2. Buildings in Context – Private
3. Buildings in Context – Public
4. Small Open Spaces
5. Large Places and Neighbourhood Designs
6. Visions and Master Plans
7. Student Projects
Honourable Mentions and Award of Excellence winners were announced at the Awards Gala hosted at Palais Royale on September 21, 2009.
1. Elements
A stand-alone object, landscape element or small-scale piece of a building which contributes significantly to the quality of the public realm. Submissions may include, but are not limited to: benches, doorways, signage, canopies, porches or colonnades, gateways, light fixtures, walkways, stairways, barrier-free access, fences and works of art.
Summary of Entries
- Serrano Entrance
- Intergrated Art
- Sound Wall
- Chameleon Clock
- Window Gallery
- Lott Memorial Fountain

2. Buildings in Context - Private
An individual building or a composition of buildings, that achieve(s) urban design excellence and is precedent setting for a project of its type through its relationship to the public realm, pedestrian amenity, detailing and massing, and the natural environment. Submissions should document and highlight how the project contributes to successful city-building through its contextual relationship and measures of sustainable design.
All types of buildings are eligible whether "landmark" or "background," new construction or a restoration/transformation. Projects in both urban and suburban contexts will be considered.
The Building in Context category consists of three sub-categories that reflect a range of scales. Entrants should clearly state in which of the following sub-categories they are submitting:
- Low-scale
A low-scale project is four storeys or less, not withstanding its land use. Submissions may include, but are not limited to: residential uses such as houses and townhouses; and retail, office, or industrial facilities on main streets and arterials.
Summary of Entries
- 12 Cassels Avenue
- 63° House
- DUCA Financial Services
- 401 Wellington St W
- Lexington on the Green
- TD Bank
- Cascade House
- 40R Laneway House
- 199 Bowood Avenue
- Foundry Loft
- Urbanscape Architectural Gallery
- Mid-rise
A mid-rise building is generally taller than a house or townhouse, but no taller than the street right-of-way which it faces (typically 4-12 storeys). Submissions may include, but are not limited to: mixed-use "Avenue" buildings, small apartment/condo buildings, commercial and industrial buildings.
Summary of Entries
- ONE SIX NINE
- Tapestry at Village Gate West
- 952 Kingston Road
- Riverside Lofts
- Queen City Vinegar Lofts
- Academy Lane & Beach House Lofts
- ONE 12 St. Clair
- The Hazelton
- Four Seasons Corporate Head Office
- 294 Richmond Street East
- Twenty Gothic
- Loggia Condominiums
- ESSENCE
- Harry Rosen Flagship Store
- Edge Lofts
- Toy Factory Lofts
- Domain the Condominium
- Tall
A tall building rises higher than the width of the right-of-way of the principal street on which it is located. A building that has both tall and mid-rise components should be entered in this category. Submissions may include, but are not limited to: residential or commercial buildings.
Summary of Entries
- DIA
- The Mosaic
- West One
- VERVE
- Serrano/Tapestry
- Jazz
- ZIP at Liberty Village
- Spire
- EQ1 & EQ2 at Equinox
- ONE Sherway
- Equinox

3. Buildings in Context - Public
An individual building or a composition of buildings, with a primary function to serve the public and/or is largely accessible to the public. Public Buildings are focal points for communities of various sizes, from small neighbourhoods to a national body. Submissions should demonstrate urban design and architectural excellence through a relationship to the public realm, pedestrian amenity, detailing and massing, the natural environment and sustainable design.
In this category, all building scales are eligible (low-scale, mid-rise and tall), as well as new construction and restoration/transformation. Buildings in both urban and suburban contexts will be considered.
Submissions may include, but are not limited to: education, health care, recreation, cultural, community and civic buildings.
Summary of Entries
- Royal Ontario Museum
- Canadian National Institute for the Blind Centre
- Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic School
- Arts and Administration Building
- Bloorview Kids Rehab
- Father John Redmond Catholic Secondary School & Regional Arts Centre
- St. Timothy Catholic School
- Monsignor Percy Johnson Catholic Secondary School
- S.W. Stewart Branch, Toronto Public Library
- Dufferin/St. Clair Branch, Toronto Public Library
- Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
- George Brown College, Centre for Hospitality and Culinary Arts
- Artscape, Wychwood Barns
- Pape/ Danforth Branch, Toronto Public Library
- Max Gluskin House
- Art Gallery of Ontario

4. Small Open Spaces
A small open space, generally related to and defined by adjacent buildings or natural/manmade elements, which provides an extension and addition to the public realm in an exemplary way. The small open space need not be publicly owned, but must be publicly accessible. Submissions may include, but are not limited to: courtyards, plazas, forecourts, gardens, trails, mews and small neighbourhood parks.
Summary of Entries
- West One Courtyard
- Migration Garden
- The Green Triangle
- MOTH Gardens: Downsview Memorial Parkette
- SickKids
- Cawthra Square Park
- Toronto Botanical Garden
- Interval House Memorial Garden
- The Richmond Courtyard
- Ireland Park
- Spadina Wavedeck

5. Large Places or Neighbourhood Designs
A design plan for a new or renovated large-scale area of the city. The project must be completed to such extent to allow the jury to clearly understand and evaluate the plan. The submissions in this category should clearly state the existing conditions and demonstrate how City objectives for establishing a clear public structure of streets, parks, open spaces and building sites are met.
The submission should also highlight major areas of innovation, particularly those related to infrastructure, environmental management and sustainable design, as well as provide evidence of community involvement and acceptance.
Submissions may include, but are not limited to: large parks, area/district plans, neighbourhood plans, Transit Oriented Developments (TODs), subdivisions, industrial parks, campus plans and streetscapes. Both urban and suburban contexts will be considered.
Summary of Entries
- HTO

6. Visions and Master Plans
Unexecuted visions for the city, studies and master plans of high inspirational value with the potential for significant impact on Toronto's development. Submissions in this category may include but are not limited to: theoretical and visionary projects, as well as any project fitting the description of Large Places or Neighbourhood Designs that is unbuilt.
Summary of Entries
- Huron Willcocks Student Commons
- Cultural Institutions in the Public Realm
- Toronto Entertainment District Master Plan
- Public Art Strategy West Don Lands
- Aurorean Landscape
- Sugar Beach
- Water West
- GO Roof, Union Station
- Lawrence Heights Revitalization
- Mayor's Tower Renewal Opportunities Book
- FLOCK
- Parade
- Parkdale BIA Capital Design Strategy
- 85 Laird Drive
- Kipling Mobility Hub
- 30 Weston Road
- Ryerson University Master Plan
- Old Cabbagetown BIA Streetscape Revitalization Plan
- Queen Street West Heritage Conservation District Plan
- Bridgepoint Health: The Next Frontier of Healthcare A Village of Care
- Lake Ontario Park Master Plan
- Heron's Hill
- Battery Park at Liberty Village
- Legacy at Heron's Hill

7. Student Projects
Students in urban design, architecture, landscape architecture and other design programs are invited to submit theoretical or studio projects relating to Toronto.
Summary of Entries
- Re-Visioning: Toronto's East Edge Employment Lands
- Way Down Town
- Watersphere
- Canada Metal Works: Post-Industrial Re-use Revolution
- Square Infinite: A Participatory Public Space with Endless Possibilities
- Room in the Laneway
- Overt Publicisation
- New Alternatives for Orphan Spaces
- Lifting Ground
- Revolving Axis
- [De] Familiarizing the Familiar
- Water Theatre
- The Islington Gallery of Art
- Box in a Box
- Renovate Your Neighbourhood
- Navigating Space By Listening
- Re-Visioning Sheppard Corridor
- Toronto Film Centre
- Gateway Park
- The Third Space

Note: The jury reserves the right not to present awards in every category. The jury also reserves the right to reallocate submissions into categories which they deem to be most appropriate.
For more information please contact TUDA@toronto.ca

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